Top Ten best read stories of 2024
Top Ten best read stories of 2024
The Enquirer is putting out its last daily newsletter of the year today as the industry winds-down for its traditional Christmas break.
The website will be updated with any major breaking stories during the holiday season with the full daily news service returning on January 6.
It has been another eventful 12 months and a busy news year for construction as the Enquirer keeps the industry up to date with what is really going on.
These were the best read stories during the year:
Our most popular stories in 2024
(Number of times they were read)
ISG files notice of administration– (206,730 page views)
ISG boss apologises to staff in late night email – (112,259 page views)
BBC brickies firm went down owing £2m to suppliers– (93,102 page views)
Strung along subcontractors fury over fall of ISG– (65,499 page views)
Chinese diggers face 83.5% duty after JCB dumping complaint– (61,509 page views)
ISG collapse brings down glazing contractor– (55,964 page views)
BAM reassures supply chain after winding-up petition– (55,068 page views)
HS2 viaduct blunder over wonky concrete segments – (53,196 page views)
Builders refuse to pay latest brick increases– (53,004 page views)
Severfield finds weld problems on nine HS2 bridges – (52,964 page views)
The Enquirer enjoyed another year of growth as busy professionals turn to us for a fast and insightful news fix.
Our daily newsletter now has more than 43,000 subscribers with an average daily open rate of more than 50%.
Google Analytics show the Enquirer enjoyed more than 25 million page views this year from more than 4.8 million users – numbers which dwarf any of our traditional construction media rivals.
Our growing band of advertisers enjoy industry leading response rates and all the details about booking a campaign for 2025 can be found here.
Our recruitment pages are thriving thanks to our unrivaled reach into construction companies while our Suppliers and Buyers Directory has already signed-up more than 6,000 firms from across the supply chain.
We’d like to wish all our readers a very Merry Christmas and here’s to a happy New Year after a well deserved break.
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